It’s more expensive to restore and maintain a covered bridge than to replace it with a steel or concrete structure. And yet, New Hampshire is still home to 60 of them, thanks to the local communities that fought to keep them alive.Hancock resident Kim.
Author Kim Varney Chandler will be at the Toadstool Bookshop, 12 Depot St., in Peterborough Oct. 29, and hold a book launch for her new book, “Covered Bridges of New Hampshire” at The Harris Center, 83 King’s Highway in Hancock, on Nov. 16..